Lightning strike at PGA Tour Championship leaves at least six people injured

At least six people were injured after lightning struck a tree at the PGA Tour Championship golf tournament in Atlanta, police said.

Five men and a girl who sought shelter under a tree during a storm at East Lake Golf Club were injured when lightning hit the tree, Atlanta Police Department spokesman James White said.

They were taken to local hospitals "alert, conscious, and breathing, for further medical treatment," White said.

One of the injured was treated at the Northside Hospital and released yesterday evening, said Katherine Watson, the hospital's spokeswoman said in a statement that those injured had been struck by debris and some of them were fans attending the tournament.

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The lightning knocked debris off the tree, wounding some people, he added. Russell said organisers encouraged everybody to leave the course and take shelter.

He also said the PGA had put a message on the scoreboards warning spectators that severe weather was approaching."You've got a lot of people, and you have to do that quickly and sometimes people don't take shelter," he said.

When asked whether a half-hour was enough time to safely evacuate the golf course, Russell said he couldn't really answer the question but said they had done everything they could.

"I wish I could say yes or no. I mean, we wanted to get the spectators, the players, the volunteers, everybody off here as soon as we possibly could, and the moment we saw we had danger, we suspended play.

"We had on the scoreboards that there was coming weather, and we got the players off, we got the volunteers off," he said.

All play was suspended for the day in the season-ending tournament in which Justin Thomas leads Rory McIlroy and Brooks Koepka.

The tournament is expected to resume Sunday morning.

The winner will take home USD$15 million with prize money available for all participants.